Verbascum ifranensis Khamar, Civeyrel, Pelissier, Badr, El Oualidi & Touhami-Ouazzani, 2017

Khamar, Hamid, Civeyrel, Laure, Pelissier, Celine, Badr, Diana, Oualidi, Jalal El & Touhami-Ouazzani, Amina, 2017, Verbascum ifranensis (Scrophulariaceae), a new endemic species from Morocco, Phytotaxa 295 (2), pp. 132-140 : 133-135

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.11646/phytotaxa.295.2.2

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.13688784

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/816287F9-FF9E-FF9F-84B2-92F0FE23FC55

treatment provided by

Felipe

scientific name

Verbascum ifranensis Khamar, Civeyrel, Pelissier, Badr, El Oualidi & Touhami-Ouazzani
status

sp. nov.

Verbascum ifranensis Khamar, Civeyrel, Pelissier, Badr, El Oualidi & Touhami-Ouazzani View in CoL , sp. nov. ( Fig.1 View FIGURE 1 )

Type: — Morocco: Middle Atlas between El Hajeb and Ifrane. RN 707 ; Iquaddar, calcareous soils, 33°34’23”N, 5°14’01”W, 1600 m, 19 July, 2011, H. Khamar 42 & L. Civeyrel 1972b (Holotype: RAB94842 About RAB !, Isotypes: RAB94843 About RAB !, RAB94844 About RAB !) GoogleMaps .

Diagnosis:— Verbascum ifranensis has morphological affinity to V. dentifolium and V. lychnitis Linnaeus (1753:177) . The new species differs from these presumably related species by the following characters: stems erect, robust, cylindrical, thinly angular; basal leaves obovate or oblanceolate, crenulate, obtuse, short and winged petiole 2–3 cm long or poorly differentiated, midrib prominent on abaxial leaf surfaces; inflorescence pyramidal-ovate panicle, with clusters of 4–7 flowers, becoming ± dense in fruiting; bracts cordate-ovate, ± acuminate; calyx 4–6 mm long, 1.5 times as short as capsule, deeply lobed; corolla marked with purplish red spots inside the throat, pellucid-punctate glands absent; filament hairs whitish mixed with a few violet ones; capsule ovoid, shortly rostrate ( Table 1).

Morphological description:—Biennial herb, 100–260 (–300) cm tall, densely and persistently tomentose with whorled branches, eglandular and whitish or pale yellowish hairs; stem erect, robust, cylindrical, thinly angular, branched in its upper part; densely leafy. Basal leaves 30–50 × 9–16 cm, densely and persistently tomentose on both surfaces, obovate or oblanceolate, base gradually attenuate into a short and winged petiole 2–3 cm long or poorly differentiated, midrib prominent on abaxial leaf surface, margin crenulate, apex obtuse, base cuneate. Cauline leaves tomentose on both surfaces and smaller; lower and median leaves subsessile, not decurrent, oblong-ovate, margin crenulate, base cordate forming atria, apex acute; upper or rameal leaves sessile, broadly cordate, apex cuspidate, margin subentire. Inflorescence well-branched, forming a pyramidal-ovate panicle, more or less dense in fruiting. Flowers fasciculate, in axillary clusters of 4 – 7 at the axils of the main bract. Median primary bract cordate-ovate, acuminate, subequal to the older fruiting pedicel. Fruiting pedicel unequal in length, 5–8 mm, bracteoles equaling or imperceptibly exceeding the calyx. Calyx densely tomentose, 4–6 mm long, deeply lobed almost to the base, lobes ovate-lanceolate, acute, entire. Corolla yellow, 25–30 mm in diameter; pellucid-punctate glands absent; densely tomentose with whitish and whorled-branched hairs outside; marked with five small, slightly coloured spots inside the throat. Stamens 5, all filaments villous with dense whitish hairs mixed with a few violet ones; two lower filaments densely hairy on their inner surface up to the anthers. Median stamen smaller than the others. All anthers similarly shaped, reniform and transversely medifixed. Style 6–10 mm long, ± straight, densely tomentose at base, ± thickened near the apex. Stigma hemispherical. Capsules ovoid, 5–7 × 3–5 mm, densely tomentose, 1.5 times as long as calyx, apex shortly rostrate. Seeds numerous, 0.9–1 × 0.6 mm, prismatic, alveolar-reticulate, with longitudinal rows of 5–6 alveoli.

Phenology:—Flowering and fruiting: June to November

Etymology:—This new species was first collected in the region of Ifrane in Morocco and was given the name of that region.

Additional specimens examined (paratypes):— Morocco: The central plateau, Aguelmous on the NNE bank of Assif Ras Beriakh, 33°34’31”N, 05°14’ 15”W, 1600 m, 21 July 2011, L. Civeyrel 1972a ( RAB94845 About RAB !) GoogleMaps ; Middle Eastern Atlas : Road between Missour and Immouzar Marmoucha, 32°14’19’’ N, 4°55’44”W, 1520 m, 21 July 2011, L. Civeyrel 1989 & H. Khamar 52 ( RAB101538 About RAB !) GoogleMaps ; Ijoukak , 31°01’00’’N, 08°08’38’’ W, 1162 m, 17 Jun 2013, L. Civeyrel 2085 & H. Khamar 204 ( RAB101539 About RAB !) GoogleMaps ; Middle Atlas between Azrou and Ifrane, 33°23’46”N, 5°12’40”W, 1770 m, L. Civeyrel 1976 & H. Khamar 42b ( RAB101540 About RAB !) GoogleMaps ; Oulmès , 33°23’20”N, 05°59’09”W, 1134 m, L. Civeyrel 2111& H. Khamar 242 ( RAB101541 About RAB !) GoogleMaps .

H

University of Helsinki

L

Nationaal Herbarium Nederland, Leiden University branch

Darwin Core Archive (for parent article) View in SIBiLS Plain XML RDF